HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1884-05-16, Page 2TN STATE OF Re
Has She Gone - Down
Ocean?
1007E0TURES AS TO.
Pysientie. er Icel.'s* Chi canto tat tae
' .4:telemeter—me Canadians boarat---
Burgin* mill•.etts visual A ng ale
tressestierst -• --- ' -
The. agents of the State TAM- 94:.askiP
• Company- have 1 eceived a des atom
•-Glasgevr tibia morning showing , IA , iit - the
steanier State of Florida, which Mt gsw
Totklor Glaegow on April' .12th, as lost
at -sea.- The des etch is as follow -- " The
,- steamer Devon, froLn New York f , ristol,
picked up on April 27th two lifgoats.of
the steamship State of FlotidaWithout
oocupants or goat.- ' A sailing vese.,1 bound
•
for the west signalled the steamef City of
Boine on April 23rd in lat. 46, Ion '42, that
_;-- she had the ship.wreaked orew. o a State
• Line i steamer on board." - The tate of
• Florida was 4,000 - tone burthen uilt at
Glttsgovz in 1879. , - - t --• - , -
. _ . . ....•. .
- - - - ••- -
zasr or cents rtiesettesns. .
' The:cable" passengers on tthe - it, tite :of
- Itloridit were:;Daniel Connor, Mei 1.4ze
•
and David Strother;!. - all of
-
-1
Ocifinoit Mrs: Jane Ingraham and. 'ittgant,
• Jos. Bennet, Andrew Fairbairn, ttt. -and
-Mrs. J. Hall
New. York ; - Henry Wood, --Miss EWood,
. Lillit an W. Woodt•134- Et Wood,. ad Mel
Shackleton, of .Wellington; Ont. takIter
• Xing:and James G. Graham, of ad
• Jas., Otuikaltank Braddock, Penn Paulo •
'Andrew- Tarue, :Abraham Wit roactii,
•_ Thos. LWilliamson, Mr:- and Mt Tho.
•
Taylor, " Thomas_ Taylor, jun, . . mitaa
Taylor, Area Taylor, and. Ada: Tet ler;7-of
Chicago:: . George -Ecidington _ ii •d -At
Bethune,- of Toronto; Fennell, o ri Lido-
! welt Ont.; dirs.•Elizabeth Colbach raid in-
lant, of Philadelphia t R. Vanderly d
J. Baker, of Philadelphia, and . o7-E'-..ke. .
Ward, Of .Cleveland,-
• . • . • .
• '• PASSENGER& BY _STEERAGE.
• W1303 steerage passengers weretW e
'vial); dames retire:toe, Martin. Jame A Ro
Stewart: Ellen Stewart, John Hutqins
OharlestPeteisoe, Joe. Foreman, W,4. -..tit Di
• Peter Rowing,Alice. Boniie, Meaty ti3ilr71
. SUM- MoDermottt J'anies Grant it Ma
•` Shannon, Elizabeth Tunnilty; Prangs C
ring, W. Hale'Hugh -.Morgan. 7.1.1:41
7Benetpri, Ellen Rogers, D.ChutaleaftrtilEx
.Brcittri i and. infant, 'John Huglieit-
- Stewart, Ellen Stewart, W.- Stew .V,
Stewart, . Stewart, Berharc.1 -Hendrickson,. '.1t. E.
•-.dont-Bs jchni3ootFanny t
•-Dick, Ole. -G. Hekre, : Martin •:Ittlere
. ars. Jane Scott, Miss rteeieLeinergitEng
tlYonellyi John Moore, Martha
• Kate Tunnility, Jonah Hale,_
Berton
Wedleke, -jonathentltenstop, T. -tett
t Edward; O'Donnell, Wm. D.. --ttrow
Samitel.IgivertY. t_TlieS tate Cf_Flottliii h
steretv Oieighty offieete sod, Men.
. . . . .
.o'otstatitz ROSSA'.13 AGENTS .4.13RO
c
bt.
ctt
-ryt
ar-
gird_
d.
eg-
tks
on,
11
ad
. ‘..
When -the State of Florida had le- Nett
York, a- rumor was- given' carrell that
eeveral.of O'Donovan Rossa's agent.4 were
abroad with dynamite and that detttotivee
were•awititing the arrival ofthe steamer at
Glasgow, to arrest the men. • This WE:i$4:1000
:firmed by cable from England, butiit•s
denied all knowledge :of the men. ..-- Chet
• Sadler, who commanded .the. vesseti wa
'.vonsidered a trustworthy„man. V
• A Glasgow cablegram 80E1 : The ,. an
get of tlip State Line believes -that the' is w
ten accidental explosion of dynamite -Ito&
i.
the steamer State of Florida. It it b4eve
dynamiters were among the passenge a.
The underwriters will lose_ .230,000 -th
Faggots, the prows& Of a robbery at Ellis'
iewellery'store, and other articles. Proem&
of other burglaries. Detective Reburni-who
cleverly trued hint to New York, reoeived
a telegram from the agents of the steamer
that he was on board. -
; Odd Stories' lihrim leverkWhere.Y.
•
• At the wedding of Hiram D. Murdock, at
Jareesvilleit Wis., all of -the eighteen ghosts
Were searched for 150 in gold, one of the
presents of the bride, which had been stolen
from her dresser. The money I was not
reoovered. :
. .
• In the -Garfield School at: Centreville,
Iowa, a boy drew a revolver on his 'teacher
because she. proposed whipping hiin. The
young wonian not only took away the
revolver but chastised him thoroughly, and
then had him taken before a Justice, who
fined him 55. ,
An interesting case is before the Howard
Oonnty (Neb.y.courts. About Christmae
time Thomas Welsh invited the son. of an
old friend to come and epend a few days at
his house, the object being that the young
man- should- make love to and marry his
daughter: - •He stayed until a, few days
ago, when he told Welsh he didn't want
the girl, and asked that the engagement be
cancelled. Welsh now - sues for the cost
of beard, fuel and •lights consumed by; tlie.
young man. •-
• In. -Trimble County, /4t, Mary Stephens
supposed her hthiband was dead, having
left home many years ago, and she married
againin July.last. Stetihens went 'to his
wife% home recently, not intending to let
himself be known. - His wife- immediately
recognized hint, and throwing her -alms
about his neck and screaming "My long.
lost husband," kissed him. - This -aroused
the jealousy of the new husband. who
struck her- acrosethe neok with a drawing
knife' he had in his hand, Batwing the
jugular vein. Stephens drew a revolver
and shot the .murderer, who in turn gave,
Stephens a out across the baok•cit the -neck
with the drawing knife. Both men are :said
to be fatally injured.
-.Latest Irish Nein.
The 45th Regiment (1st 13attaliOn Sher-
wood; Foresters- or, Derbyshire) 'is- at pre-
sent at Athlone. •
, .
• There. has been great falling off in the
quantity of Irish salmon sent-tothe Lon-
don Market this season as corapered with
year. . .
• Mr. Richard anders,of Brackenstown
Swords, died on April 1.4th. ..Untilreoently
he the head of one of the oldest firms
in Ireland. -
In North Ward Dublin poor law elections
recently, the Lord Mayor (Nationalist) was
defeated by a large majority. The,Conser-
vativee carried every seat. -
At Limerioiquarter sessions& couple of
:Weeks' ago, the . County Court Judge was
presented by the sheriff with a pair -of
White gloves-, there being no criminal . case
for ' - _ -
A design of Deane & Sons, Dublin, 'lot
the new Irish Science and Art Museum and
National Library has been aecepteds The
building. will -cost (tier £100,000. '
An unsuccessful -attempt _mai made on-
'
"! April Ilth to upset the Berry mail train,
tit a five miles from Tralee. Some damage
'a bout
s't! was done to the road, but no -injury to the
t passengers occurred. ••.
The 'Marquis Of Donegal, who died On --
as the 20th October last at Brighton, had per.
4 Sontil estates amounting to £41,000. • By
his will he leaves quarries and railway
• property in Ireland to his wife, and then to
t the trusteeleof the family estate. •
steamer should prove to be lost. • no ship
-that signalled the -.City. of ROMG was fall.
'rigged -vessel' of Enelish band. - She's .dis-
ptayed- no national flag. After Fleeting he
signals she proceeded westward slowly. Five
other.sailing vessels :were- sighted 14:.the
mama tide.
the steamer Devon pioked th-,t1
-A Liondon -cablegram sayi : The ol'aptain
of
lite -
boats of -the State of Florida on Saaday
evening in let. 47.25; long. 34.16. Ht.,' feels
certain the _ootnipantswere taken offa`dy
passing vessels - • ..".•
-
It is no longer doubted- that theiship
which signalled the. City. of Rothe Raved
. soot.) if netall those on Ward the St :tit ot
Florida.: It isealaillateid that the di1ser
- occurred on the 18tku1t„: at which , Lt. rtod
the wind ,tta,s blowing from the east. I ;The
boats would drift • mail rescued. •r4Zhey
must' -have -been .-. lannohed, becausellihey
were so fixed•thatthey would not otbeirwise
- have floated. The fact that the boati:ifgete
without gear or bare a regardedlavotably,-
• as indicating that the sescuingship sired
_ _the oars and'gear,- and allowed the`limits
to drift away.. One of. the beats is thp-life-
boat No. X, the other is a sniall,neviliboat
not numbered.
-7 THE DYNAMITE -THEORY DISCRED
• I: •
- Tbel owners - are of -opinion that the 5ate
- of Florida struck: tan iceberg) as thlbap..
tain of the State: of Pennsylvania rettorts •
ice- in the region- in which she is. •euppotied•
to have been at the time of the .distoter:
The dynamite theoty isnot received. With
any -favor 'whatever. . The inventory.shoWs-
• that the cargo was shipped by two
known firms, and all the small.-patiges
•• On board- have been accounted .for. The
- detectives reported to baw.'-aiting the p
South American .NCW14.
. _ •
. The Brazilian Government is reorganiz-
ing-, the national 'guards of the pevetal
.,.provintes: •
The Brazilian Government has just spent
010,000000 upon the new water supply of
Rio. Nevertheless complaints are lend and
deep otwant of Water. . .
-The. Government of the Argentine Rot
public has received a, pripostil for the lean
m
of 030;000,000 from soEnglish banking
houses.1
.The 7Governinent of the Province • Of
Buenos` Ayres has just ordered- thetremoval
to the new capital, La Plata, of all .the de-
partment offices. In that city egreat num-
ber of wooden .houses have • been put up,
m
ooraing,frothe *United States. '
. _
A robbery ot $60,000 by one Lanictlie.has
just been discovered. at Buenos Ayres. A.
Minister of State is said to have been in
Partnership with Lamothe in the robbery.
he trobbee, forged the names of thirty
etent prominent 'people, bankers and
rchants.
At Rio de Janeiro there have been. pro-
longedrejoiitinge over the final. abolition of
slavertin one of the twenty .provinces of
Braeil. From Ceara the following telegram
was received by the festival. commission:
"Ceara has )ennobled labor; Brazil -intuit
imitate the example.. Press, -Senators,
Deptitice, citizens of all ranks,let'uslabor."
•
'twee= Lenin. --
0 kV
9 like the love Of 'a mother
• .• Whentrials are gathering
e
E• Though fond is the-eareof afbaarotrtrier,-'
arrival Of the Statet-of Flotilla were 8eal:1w
tto arreet a Teronto- thief supposed to pi on
the vessel. .. .' • - -
The next nein coniternieg the late ctighe
missing • 'Easel is. aviaited-from Anietttioa,
where ilia "supposed _those rescued wfil be
landed; The captain of the City of . Pgin2e
• ectplains that when the ship .display tthe
• signals there was or no wind. he
flags showed bad*, and were , diffiou to
read.- The City,' of Rome passed the
rapidly without 'replying to theeignalsr •
• • maientiss os- Soap. - , •
• Mr. A. Bethune, item of Pr. Bethunetof
Toronto; and - Mr. -George Eddington were
oh board the ill fated steamer. ; The letter
was a -poling. Sootohman, and both were
• engaged in oreoge .growing in Flo#da:
• They were. On their way to •Gleigott to
• visit Eddingtonti father, who is a weEttliy
• .merchant there:•
Bryson, partner of . Miller,the btacg •
• who _ got ten years lathe Penitentiary:
burglaryiat this city,'is etio believed to1-e
•been on *lard as -a Steerage tiakiiii.Hget*
. ;name does not appeetron theeliste
Morethazi probable,he was travelling -
. an assumed name.' He had:it lot of. stoD,,
furs with .hin2 whit* were taken
Lugsdm's store; -also a' number of gekt•
• Sometimes it will fail at the last.
•' Should you turn from the.pathWay.of-ditY,
- A sister's affection may fade
But mother-loveshows its beat beauty • •
. - When her child to sin is betrayed.
. •
father may speak eteni and coldly
if his son -has -wandered astray;
But mother will stand forward boldly• '
Aridhelp.hlM regain the lost way,
' And speak to him kindly, hr. -wartime,.
- with just as tender a tone- .
As she did, in childhood's pure 'morning,
• Erelsorrow and Crime he had known:
„
.41h, no! there's .no love like a mother's
• So noble, forgiving and true
We may trust to many another's
And. value it, that it is.new,
- To find, when life's sun is Shrouded, -
- And our pathway enters the glodm,
Their love for us, too, will be clouded, .
While bets follows vs to the tomb.
astronomer Proctor having 'recently and
put lioly deselared that the plenetatipiter is
in the transition state our earth was 34,T'
0913,000 years •-ago, is just now a little un-
pcipular in. England,. and it said that he
prgposes to -come and. reside .permanently
. this .coiintiy,-- .1:laving ;selected -aa
-
re -dance. -St. sJoseph,-"Me !date hot will
erect a 0044118. and 8141P his t!w.39Pep
-
- -large quantity of silverplae andteidtg
artteleb was disoovered the other day ni
Harelaw Dam, near Port Glasgow. The
goods are believed to have been the spoil of
horeebrealters. •
AL DRE A 'CAL41111TY.
• , :
Peor-Honse Burned. Down and the
monies Illinetiteredln 'Their Bids. .
•-A - last (Thursday). night's Paw Pavrittit test News
(Mich.) despatch Bays :, Had itnot been for: Itttw- '
the &woven, at o'clock in the morning • 0 -ver the WO:4141.
by a man named! HalseY, sleeping in the F,• 1.
LEGRAPHIC
SUNMAN
Maim building Of the- Vanburen- Col:tut-ft
Poor-H-ouse, of fire in an addition -in th
rear of that structure, in all probability
nearly weary one of the officers, employees
and inittates, numbering nearly sixty per
sone, Would have been burned to death or
mothered in their beds. As it is, charred
fragments are all that remain of fourteen
inmates. 'Venbaren County-poor-honge is
located -on e farm several miles west of
herp and ',three Miles east of Hartford.
Th' buildings 'consist • of a ilarge
two-storey structure, • which is • the
mein building; a wing on the east side, a
two-storey addition in the rear of the main
building, and two detached buildings. Hal-
sey was awakened!' by cries from the rear
addititai, and ran down the hall to the floor
leading into the addition. He was almeet
overcome by the !dense smoke,- which at
once assailed hid, and saw thet the build-
ing wasburning furiously. • It was impos-
sible to proceed further into the interior.
Halsey, though nearly stilled, hatitpresence
of mind to close :the door and live the
alarm. _Persons in the front part of the,
banding Were soon aroused, and made all
haste to save their lives. Superintendent
CE1811'S daughter had recently beets siok
with typhoid fever; and WES in a -very weak
condition. . She was removed in safety.
The limes spread with such rapidity that
only in organ, _bureau and. two of three
other articles of ftirniture were saved. The
jail being detached, there .was - time. to
.areuse and rescue the inmates _before the
fire t spread to that building, although
little else obuld be saved. • After all
possible in the way of saving life had been
dean, messengers 'Were lent to Hartford,
and a. fire engine from that -place ' came at
once, but on the arrival ofthe firemen they
mild do nothing. As soon as the state of
the ruins would. admit the building vihich
was the scene of the holocaust was en-
tered. - " It Was found that nearly all the
viotims had been sntothered in their beds,
although there were iedioations, at one spot
.as three or four had huddled together
and , died. _One belly, whieh was stib-
stantially intact, was placed in a box by
itself. What could be gathered of the re-
maining thirteen bodies wateplaced in one
box about - the _size of an ordinary. coffin.
Among these burnt or smothered to -death
were -Mrs. Willson 'i and a daughter, who
were recently sent:,tothe -0-ounty House
from Covert township. ' The mother had
place --Viet children . in the State public
also two boys with liner; Arrangements to
,sohool .- at Coldwater had .been, almost
oonipleted. t The two boys escaped. . Of
thote 'lost, several were upwards of 70
years of age, and two or three were hope-
lessly insane: . -
, Following 18 alist of those whortperished :
James Johnson, an pld. Sailor, 88 years of.
eget 'Henry _Biker half mute, . aged 40;
B,enjamin Bogardus`, aged 46; old man
named -Sawyer, insane, lately arrived from
Kalamazoo asylum; a .man named Ser.
geant, over 70 yeao old Fred. Eohen-
berger, an epileptio, aged 71; a Man named
Myers, over 70; Peter. Bolden; Deborah
Grayette, over 70; Mrs._ Curtiss, insane;
Ceroline_Sheaver, aged 35; ' Caroline Long,
aged 30 ; Mrat Willson and her daughter,
aged 10. - People .in the n-eighborbood did.
all in their power t� relieve the Atnfortunt
atest and make' thein as comfortable. as
circumstanees would permit.- Thousands
of people -visited the ruins. The loss .on
buielings is estimated at 515,000; fully
insured. •
• Late Acottishews
. r •
• - The Earl of Roiebery will preside at the
anniversary festival Of. the - Cabdrivers'
Benevolent _Association in London `on June
dlet. _ , • .
. The 'Duchess of Argyll is in failing
health, and is rapidly becoming a great
invalid. She is tumble- to drive out in an
open ; carriage - as the slightest .. smell' of a
h-orsepreduces a species of asthma. •
Mr; Robert Ainslie assistant -Chamber-
lain to the Duke of : Bucoleuch at Drum-
lanrig. has been appointedassistant mana-
ger of the Highlanders' Land 0 -Live Stook
Company. - •
H •
John Watson, boot and -shoe maker; Fal-
kirk, - While passing through Polmont on
--4pril-14th on a Mayotte, fell forward on the
-machine and breathed his last within two
or three ininutes. . • - :
. An extraordinary suicide- took place -in a
music hall at Motherwell .on Saturday
afternoon week. • A performance of a piece
.entitled "The Babes in the Wood' was
proceeding, and Was being witnessed bya
large number of children, when -a retired
grocer named Middleton; Who -had with
him in the hall three of his own children,
rose itt.the gallery., and, flourishing a razor
and eXclainting "That is mockery, this is
reality," out hie throat almost from *ear to
ear, dying within a few -minutes. A terrible
panic ensued; andit rush was madefrom all
parts of the. house to the feint door t The
promptitude of the manager in making his
way to the door, where .-already several
(children had'fallen, and Withdrawing the
bolt; averted what might have been a repe-
tition: of the Sunderland calamity. The
event-thtew-the town into at state of great
exotteinent. .
- Queen ViCtorla's• Beds.
-
_ Two beds, which have been manufactured
at the Castle works; were despatched last
week from Windsor -tte Portsmouth and
Darmstadt. One was tO be placed in the
Queen's cabin on board the Osberne, and
the other in the bedroom which elm Is to
ocoupyin the -Nene Sohlose, at Darmstadt.
Her -Majesty invariably sleeps on a„ bed
made after a certain pattern, and one is al-
ways sent in advance for her use when she
*going to a strange places—London Truth:
'spicious oi people what paten' ter
be so ten'er-hearted. I once knowtt a man
whut had se much "feelin' dat he wouldn'
step on . spider?, an' be wee airterwards
htingt..for murderm' wife..-Aricansato
-Traveller.
• Owing to the disooiety at Mosoow of a
•
Plot to attiminate the Czar thefestivities
deeigned at lilosolavin honor of the writing. fowl
of-itge of the Cearovitoli will be held al :emit
Petersburg. • . the
party throughout the Empire..•
German Liberals have organized tibeir the
•
• Cannavino.
F. Itiegelierwas re,taeted-BlaYitr--
.,
aebeo by aooltimmion. t . • .
,
oseph Heodersoni a farmer, ten Out of a
waggon at Kingston, and njuring his
beCame paralyzed. He ,died • abortlY
ee .•
he trial of [the three m't ciargeil with
'murder of. Peter Lazier at Moorefield
Depember will cern° on at: the Picton
'zee to -morrow. ' • . 1. -
•
, ohn McGuire, a cattle dtoviar from St.
cis, fell from a car on the Canada South.
Railway, near St. Thoints,-On Sunday
Fisys,70.ng and was instantly killed,: his head.
stfOg severed from his body. •
t.7•. .
•DX
it.Johneon Henderson, whet! left Belle-'
te on Friday lest •to auntie; . charge of
phutch of England miesioni it Roalin,
rat thrown from hiitvehiole by the break-.
of an axle and l sustained atraottire of
All
ower jai*. •-0 •
a largely attended' meeting -of theith
t fliers at London- list eveniihg it was
imonsly resolved to -tender_ OW. Walker
prewell dinner on the. ocOaiOn. of his
ee#erneot from the cominand c1 the bat-
' 'ton. •
ter Leo E. B. Riggs, hged 4 years,
.1- • ,
• - •
'of the leader of the Bellgville Odd -
ewe' band, who recently 'eyed, the
'0 successfully at " oncerie has been.
-•=egented by Mrs. J. Ir Iles with a silver
- in recognition of hisprecooict tslent.
a Sunday lagt Wm. Renry, dealer in
• .ttirozt, ete.,, and his- teamster,
etitge Sciott, were arrested byethe police
*toed with breaking into and destroying
tlype in the • Stratford Times office:
were lodged in jail and temande
*. p.m. yesterday, when hey were
ht before a magistrate and emended
9 a.m. on Wednesday next.
drowning accident ocoutrati on Sun-
•. on the North River, at -St. Jerome,
ti by which- a young marittrented
L.LI.Or lad his life. Deceased *tot out row.
it with his sister in a skiff, whet: the tiny
was carried away by the ouitentt and
alined over a dam thirteen feeet? into the
geee4ing water below. The cite ased was
&tett Seen after, but the girl da" kie to the
serfaile and was carried rattidtly down
-reane, until elle was rescued ter being
_ait4eted about against rocks intt
et% erect With bruises.
:
ese• enke Phipps, the condemned
ir.Sa,ndwicli jail, has abandone
•13te V/9.8
• .
ardent
, an hope
eftosping the gallows now; and is only
ions that the fatal day shall come,. He
salt 'to • one of the jail attendeAties few
dpeef ago that he thoughtgtistive Burton
rceeot. have fixed the day ot' execution-
• et, so that be would be out Of Ituepense.
lawyer wrote to Washington e4treeting
t • ,Secretary of State to atilt the Do -
'
Aes
1oJohnkistOr, wnholir:ienOwn;erving &alto.*
-
hanyeirtansenentehneeekfotor b ou r6 g I, 01 oy ., site Tft r ebtlyte:13 yze:.3.1.c;:3,
wh;died'in-Evinegilitsi.
Frank LeoOmplained It,
..
Chicago pollee that a Chinese laundrYmele
known as "China Joe" has enticed his teiff
sway by giving her diamonds, and that itt5
has .her oonoealed in his .establistleemt
The police wilPiaid the den. • • It
ptiR
During
jntik,Ark, yery itf
avicilren-tPheasitlzadlo-drai:et6tInnt
LitlI
t'.j
Shed fell .on a large number of contiotB
employed in brick -making. One gust cuttel -
killed • and - another seriously ee:{r . edi •
Several of the convicts were injur t '
• ... tki t$
,
, Mike World's Workers.
. The strike at Fall River mtv'3tailliy
lri
tldoi- a
t_ Cigarmakingin /slew York is etill dn.
u
It is estimated that S34-000,000 is
vested in the Konongeliela
.00al mining alone.
- A reduction of wages has taken -plegokliq
the Kingston locomotive works. '-
. Several of the laborers who, Were ont
strike at Kingston have gone back to work., .
a, 51.25. The wages demanded were
- Tne growtlittf.the liaights of Lao e in 1
Massachusetts for the past year has been ,
somethingmarkable.carhkioaabgl.
o
ec-• arrzntere Union,
li
about 1,800 in Ouneber, yeeterday dem d.li
ed an increase- of wages to $$ car day. 41
vocJaothenoi•MissintobareLl.riedmoftilisse TeleratheeroevZil .
' Minn'e
who was one of the prominent Jadies441theli
late strike. . -
PenneyIvabia. has 50,000 childreoiat
work, New Ycirk follows dlosely -51tdd
Massachusetts Edam& third urea the list. M
Thistis the "full consummate &wee "
raodern •chilization.
The strikerstin the stove foundry of Sher. ..
man S. Jewett% Co., Buffalo, N. Y., teavele
resumed work at a 15 tier int. reduction. in ti
'wages, being i3atisfied, after a confeteneeti
with the firms -that the reduction ig eoles.
13arY. ' .5 •
11
The • iroomotdders of ek. Louis &Ad
vicinity recently received information :It !!
at a meeting of the Ironmoculders' Ureien
of North America, held at -Cincinnati, at
was resolved to make a demand of 15 per '
cent. increase; to take effect from and after
May lett - . •
The furniture intereet in the United
-States is enormous. . Tlersee :yeare .ago it et
=Minted in New York te $00 fectorieeand
a product of nearly 510,000,000. Cineinnati
had 119 factories, wnn a roduct of $4,500, -
POO. Chicago turnectout febeve $6,000,000
Philadelphia, 55,000,000; oeted Bootee*,
$4,000,000. '
Ttie order of the -Union Paha° Directors A
.reducing the wages of all eo-:ployees 10 pee ,t1
cent. was followed by a 'general walk -out 11
along the main line from et'eonoil Bluffs to
Ogden, and also. on le;ieed lines well
• branches. Fully: 12;000 71:.0,2 • quit work, 1st
and with the -exception ef two Passe gee
trains not a wheel was turned. A corazeitef
tee of the strikers waited upon General IE
Manager Clark on _Ftidae at Omaha, and
informed. him that the own were out to
stay, and that they would not• accept, -
„
nteeeon Government for &corm:battalion of -
10
compromise. Mr. Clark asked time to -
consult with the New York officials,
promised a decisive In.litriver az 5 oteleole.
He telegraphed to Proeident wbo ft
failed to reply, Mr. Clark iarefore nog.
Bed all heads of departments to take baele
men at old rate: ' There waS great reiolvainge
•,2 ..'
potence from hanging t� iippelson-
foi life. An answer has been ceceived
-- he case is "not one that 'calls for
in erterence."
-;
European.
the -distinguished Italian' poet, is
1 -
dyt thf ▪ o
•
e crew of the ship lrOn Cross
veleetoa .arrived at Queemitown yeterday
Cholera on the voyage frote lavas '
Arab 'Journal, Bl Bayou, afar
El bdi demands £500,000 rite'
erdon, the sum to be pal
withit• i'three months.
" th
m f
to hi
at
or
in
ttlie- preliminaries of:the Eripti Con.
fersage have been settled. it *‘ meet
in 'London the first week in S, et and
is e:-,,oeoted :to continue its sessor three
-•
_wee tet •
a- heavy thunderstorm 6 l'ondon -
yes.-lAay'afternoon aball of fire'2eJ in the
soutaetn part of the city, and buret "with a
1010 report. The reaideots for:milee 63rothid
wer fetrilied. •
ndly relations between Ftanlee and
Biota* are ruptured. The authoritiee of
11°1N:3ett refused to.disiniss the Govetnor of •
Watttv.at the demand of the Frenclairepre:
semitt Ave. The French legation .theteupon
hanitteltdown ite flag.
eral . Wolseley advises 'that General
Grett4 be . placed in command of the
autittan expedition to Khartoum it Oa Eng-
lish: 240 *is Sent The War Office an is
that, -4t-,t400- troops • start from AteiOut -for
Kheaohitm about the end of July. •
-
At•t'&tholic miseionaltr recentlylionethe
Sone* writes to the PolitiRche-Odelkon;
_ilekt,:•_-tbat every one in that _region le- int-
preetedtwith the conviction that Khartoum
ande4rber arelost, and, unless tho 3ritish
eoettatstrong enoughforce to hold Aikotian,
pt will eventually succunib Ito the
, •
is Tseng is busily engaged, in Paris
set he affairs of the Chinese Entbassy
in ors* previous to handing theta over
to sccessor, Li Fong P0a, late Chinese
Miteteter at Berlin. French statesmen feel
mew. over the change, on amount of the
oew-t4ta8sador's .friendly relationt with
BisettrOk and knowledge of his poli, re-
gardttg
Fekterald and ten other Feni6ng were
ttrrafttted at Sligo yesterday, eiharged,With
being- .4-4vincib1es • and with the /Order of
landietties and others. -Moines Morl&n, a
frieneri4 Sheridan, testified that telien he
• joint* be Invincibles he was . sworrl, -on -a
kn1tfd pledged himself to secret, to-
implgtt- obedience to bis leaders, to act
whettteelled- Upon by them, and to deal
death tttall tyrants. '
Ptttne knowntobe Nihilists or Sus' bets
- A 1,54:Petersburg despatch. says sar
of e
sts
ed of ett*neotion with. the Order entrizme
WithOt4bettement.- • A very large tittOther
of artittety atom have been arresteeo
cuse4;otbeing connected with - the tinorder -
-of •07,240fkin. The • explanation tit these
arreett tt that Degaieff, who assaasittated
Sudeittiq, was himself attone'tinte iitittshe
artillertt `genies. 'Several more stufEents
hairti ',.,,,,:;•eivarrested, at Moecow, and the first
--ommtt-tr Id- a new Paper publieheil '12
ettf, -in Mond* '13nivereiti,, 04444
W .
beeWseigod. •ThejSearetaritof
Otttitttl Justices and. the mistresii of -.
e6.,4o4 for womenTis 'Petersburg :ave
tfrei4-,arrested. •
• *
• Ncyr Aledieal Revelations,
The Polyclinic states that • the nee o2
paper towels in cleansing wounds haslecett
found very satisfactory. Sponges him
always- been regarded t h tiuspicion by
surgeons, as it is so difficult to keep them
.
la a perfectly purified condition. But The
paper towels are to be 'used once only, and,
stithey cost only from -ts,6 to 47,50 par
1,000, are available in the -sick ,room. They
,are from Japan, and the pale colors with
which they are decorated are found°th be)
unobjectionable.
in a paper rdad before the Edinburgh
ElealtIr Society Dr. Almond referred to the
custom of havingthe head- covered out of
doors and uncovered within doors as very
inittrieas on account of its -making pe-
. 4
seneitive to draughts of air as to ea e the fel
to take cold. 'Boys,. he said, • hie we
bareheaded out of doors could stand a
greater amount. of ventilation in schools,
rooms and sleeping rootte than those who
wore heed coverings. -
- The Memphis f‘Mddica1 " sap
• the. Missourt .-Suprem-e Ctutt has decidea
that information obtained by a phy-
eician from - a patieni must
be disclosed -on the witnesg -stand,
when :the information wag neoessaryt
enabl�. the doctor' to prescribe as a phyolt
ohm or operate- as a' eurgeon: The oottat
_held that it would not -do, while the mouth
of -physician is closed to the actual spoken.
words Of a patient, to open it -as to know-
ledge acquired fromi his diaknosis.
Some of of the English medical ionrnals-
havealready begun to point out the great
iniportince of not over-feedmginfaretiewith
starchy foods, such as bread, farnia, gruel,
ate., as the warm season approachee.
,Accordiog to authorities like Sir James
Paget, suchicrier-feeding ie a fruitfultause
of the large infant mortality in warm
,eveather. The one article most necessary
to the.lifs sof a\child at all times it3 water.
• The "return relative to deaths in tho •
.13ritish merchant service for 1882 gives
1,011 deaths ot seamen 'from -disease out -of
a total 4,659 deaths on the eemand
abroad 2,181 were drowned by shipifeeek,
It036 otheiwis e 'than by wrehlt and 286 •
were killed by ether act:4E101lb, zilaking
3,453 accidental cases. • The figure's are
regarded. as approximate only, their vale
-coneisting in . the proportionate n2ortality
as to deaths by disease and accident.
- Three Itiurths of the officers of the
Gernian arinttwear corsets.
"1 am making both ends meet," rep
marked the donkey, as he oraoh hif3.
right ear with his left hind foot.
. The vanity, of human life is lie a river,
conetently passing away, and yet con-
atintly coming on.—Pope.
- She, enoouragingly : "Your step SU*
Mine ,exacitly, Mr. Robinson." .11e,nerve
ously: Bo glad to hear you say so. Miso -
-bhbairrP.'e;f3taipliAllea9Wa IivixFleal8thuyeheaitibziden w
oa
l
f st
*z
e
r
ea.
:.
ort, Conn., has given his town a 550t00D
school building. There is something Stopi
about a gift like that.
•